- Mystery drones won't interfere with Santa's work: US tracker
- Djokovic eyes more Slam glory as Swiatek returns under doping cloud
- Australia's in-form Head confirmed fit for Boxing Day Test
- Brazilian midfielder Oscar returns to Sao Paulo
- 'Wemby' and 'Ant-Man' to make NBA Christmas debuts
- US agency focused on foreign disinformation shuts down
- On Christmas Eve, Pope Francis launches holy Jubilee year
- 'Like a dream': AFP photographer's return to Syria
- Chiefs seek top seed in holiday test for playoff-bound NFL teams
- Panamanians protest 'public enemy' Trump's canal threat
- Cyclone death toll in Mayotte rises to 39
- Ecuador vice president says Noboa seeking her 'banishment'
- Leicester boss Van Nistelrooy aware of 'bigger picture' as Liverpool await
- Syria authorities say armed groups have agreed to disband
- Maresca expects Man City to be in title hunt as he downplays Chelsea's chancs
- Man Utd boss Amorim vows to stay on course despite Rashford row
- South Africa opt for all-pace attack against Pakistan
- Guardiola adamant Man City slump not all about Haaland
- Global stocks mostly higher in thin pre-Christmas trade
- Bethlehem marks sombre Christmas under shadow of war
- NASA probe makes closest ever pass by the Sun
- 11 killed in blast at Turkey explosives plant
- Indonesia considers parole for ex-terror chiefs: official
- Global stocks mostly rise in thin pre-Christmas trade
- Postecoglou says Spurs 'need to reinforce' in transfer window
- Le Pen says days of new French govt numbered
- Global stocks mostly rise after US tech rally
- Villa boss Emery set for 'very difficult' clash with Newcastle
- Investors swoop in to save German flying taxi startup
- How Finnish youth learn to spot disinformation
- South Korean opposition postpones decision to impeach acting president
- 12 killed in blast at Turkey explosives plant
- Panama leaders past and present reject Trump's threat of Canal takeover
- Hong Kong police issue fresh bounties for activists overseas
- Saving the mysterious African manatee at Cameroon hotspot
- India consider second spinner for Boxing Day Test
- London wall illuminates Covid's enduring pain at Christmas
- Poyet appointed manager at South Korea's Jeonbuk
- South Korea's opposition vows to impeach acting president
- The tsunami detection buoys safeguarding lives in Thailand
- Teen Konstas to open for Australia in Boxing Day India Test
- Asian stocks mostly up after US tech rally
- US panel could not reach consensus on US-Japan steel deal: Nippon
- The real-life violence that inspired South Korea's 'Squid Game'
- Blogs to Bluesky: social media shifts responses after 2004 tsunami
- Tennis power couple de Minaur and Boulter get engaged
- Supermaxi yachts eye record in gruelling Sydney-Hobart race
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupts, spewing columns of lava
- Battery X Metals Announces Closing of Non-Brokered Private Placement and Debt Settlement
- MGO Global Announces Closing of Upsized $6.0 Million Public Offering
Kampai! All about Japanese sake
Japanese tipples sake and shochu -- and the knowledge and skills honed over centuries to make them -- have been added to UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
AFP looks at how sake, a rice wine, is made, its myriad varieties, and its role in everyday life and traditions:
- History -
It's believed people in the archipelago began brewing rice in a simple way some two millennia ago, with a third-century Chinese chronicle describing the Japanese as fond of alcohol.
By around 1000 AD, the imperial palace had a department to supervise the manufacturing of sake and its use in rituals, according to the Japan Sake and Shochu Makers Association.
The multi-staged brewing techniques still used today are thought to have been established around the 1700s.
Nowadays there are around 1,400 sake breweries in Japan.
Shochu, which was also added to UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list on Wednesday, is a spirit distilled from different ingredients such as sweet potato, mainly in the country's southwest.
- The process -
Sake is stronger than beer or wine made from grapes, but weaker than shochu. It is made by fermenting special rice with bigger and rounder grains than varieties eaten in meals.
First, the grains are polished to remove the outer layers, revealing a water-absorbent white core rich in starch.
Brewers wash, soak and steam the polished rice before growing a special mould on it called koji. They then mix it with water and yeast to create a starter.
Adding more steamed rice and water several times sparks two types of chemical reactions in a single cask –- converting starch to sugar and sugar to alcohol -- a more complex process than making wine from sugar-rich grapes.
- What's koji? -
Koji is mould from bacteria found in humid Asian countries. It is an essential element of Japanese cuisine -- used to make not just sake but also miso, soy sauce and other food.
The genus designated as Japan's national mould is called aspergillus oryzae, also known as "koji-kabi".
"Over more than a thousand years, brewers selected and cultivated the best type of mould from all the wild ones out there," Taku Takahashi, from Tokyo's Toshimaya Shuzo brewery, told AFP.
The sake-making process as we know it now, where humans intervene to spark fermentation, was developed "after many, many failures", he added.
- Sake varieties -
Generally speaking, there are two types of sake: one made purely from rice, and the other, mixed with distilled alcohol.
The higher the grade of grain polishing, the fruitier and drier the sake.
More polished varieties requiring more rice tend to be pricier, but some gastronomists appreciate less polished types for their rich and mellow flavour.
Breweries adjust their flavours to suit local delicacies. For example, near the Pacific Ocean, dry sake is produced to pair with red-meat fish such as tuna and bonito.
- How is it consumed? -
Sake "has a very important role" in society and is drunk at weddings and funerals, Takahashi said.
It is also drunk to mark store openings and election victories -- or just to say "kampai" meaning "cheers" in Japanese pubs.
Traditionally three ritual offerings are made to the many gods of Japan's Shinto religion: rice, a rice cake and sake.
And at Shinto weddings, the bride and groom drink sake from the same porcelain cup to symbolise their union.
Breweries still hang a ball of cedar leaves outside, which change colour from green to brown -- letting customers know when the "nouveau" sake is ready in early winter.
- Going forward -
Sake consumption has declined a lot in Japan over 50 years, as other drinks like beer and wine become more popular.
The agriculture ministry says the country drank only 390 million litres of sake in 2023, down from 1.7 billion litres in 1973.
However, exports of sake have more than doubled since 2011, and it is now brewed as far afield as New Zealand, France and the United States.
O.M.Souza--AMWN